Benzos...Weed
Wow...where do I begin?
Chitown - good follow through. Thanks for the compliment and support. It is very true that some heavy users experience a mild/moderate recovery while some minor users experience full psychosis and depersonalization. There is a wide spectrum with this experience of recovery. Some of it could be based upon genetic makeup and resilience in the serotonin system.
However, the pharmacokinetics of MDMA are NOT linear, so the concentration of the drug in the bloodstream and brain cannot be predicted reliably. A great number of factors can play a role. Research clearly shows that direct role played by temperature, but other factors such as contents of stomach/intestines, age, and previous use of marijuana may also play significant roles. The most reliable way to cause damage,
proven in research, is to re-dose. Re-dosing and rolling multiple days in a row is
exactly the method used to induce neurotoxicity in animals. With a high enough and frequent enough dose, all other factors wither in their importance...
This is important because the OP noted a repeated-use pattern on a prior occasion. Regardless of the countless stories of 'binges' by other people, research
clearly shows that this is NOT a 'binge-worthy' drug. In fact, it is one of the MOST foolish drugs to use in this manner, and stories suggesting the absence of harm are quite dangerous.
I know I have made this point to you personally already - this is directed at new readers only.
Listen to Chitown's advice on benzos.
They are so dangerous you cannot imagine the horror awaiting you.
Literally
hundreds of thousands of emergency room visits EVERY YEAR involve a benzodiazapene. Think about that....
I have some experience with benzos to add...
I never, ever used them in a foolish manner. Alcohol does NOT mix with them, and I was always smart enough to know that. I was also smart enough to stop taking them after 2-3 days.
If I take benzos ever, I still follow the '2-day' rule.
This means that I am allowed only ONE dose per day, not as many as I can get my hands on. Even with such a
moderate use, day 2
always turns out to cause problems.
How can I explain?
If I take it only once, the next day is a little irritating.
If I take it for 2 days consecutively, the 3rd day is horrible.
Going beyond this simply does not happen.
The anxiety caused by benzos is special.
It is insidious - it gets inside of you and convinces you that the way you are feeling
makes sense. What you become angry or upset about is REAL shit going on in your life. You have EVERY right to get pissed, you tell yourself. This has NOTHING to do with the drug...
How wrong this turns out to be.
Only after a real panic attack does the truth reveal itself.
Only in hind-sight does it become obvious what the cause is.
While it is going on there is NO awareness, NO control.
Opiates are my favorite, but with all drugs I practice a cautious approach...except for the obvious MDMA 'binge'.
With opiates, I allow 3 days maximum. Withdrawal DOES suck, but it pales in comparison to benzos. Opiates make you cranky, benzos make you crazy.
Again, 2 days is all it takes to cause a REALLY bad day for me...
Imagine what happens to people that just keep taking it...
They cannot live without it, because the reality of life becomes intolerable for them! If they DO eventually stop, the word 'panic' doesn't even come CLOSE.
They literally go the ER believing they are having a heart-attack!
Some of them DO.
Loss of consciousness and seizure is also common.
This is very scary shit...but what is scarier is the after-math.
Some former benzo users feel NOTHING when the discontinue the drug.
They have NO fear, NO anxiety, and also NO joy, NO pleasure. Nothing.
Blank, empty human beings...for YEARS.
If you thought MDMA recovery was bad, look into long-term benzo users in The Dark Side. My friend, that will set you straight on benzo use.
Benzos are great, no miraculous, for one-time EMERGENCY use.
They can literally save lives, including when an acute MDMA reaction threatens a lethal rise in blood pressure. They can prevent suicide, too. And the great part is they target ONLY the brain, so they don't interact with most medications that a doctor may need to give a patient. It is considered 'safe' for this reason.
Just like MDMA, a miracle can become a goddamn
nightmare.
You have been warned by a man that has been there and back - listen to Chitown. Learn from his experience and avoid the benzos my friend.
Ok... moving on.
Jackie Chan is right, the weed high will eventually come back after a long time.
It is best to avoid it for now. I have had terrible reactions to it as well during my recovery.
During the first month I avoided it due to the incredible symptoms I experienced. But the FIRST time I smoked after losing my tolerance, it was at the 4 week mark. I took 5 hits of high quality dro and I proceeded to lose my mind. I literally felt like the FIRST night near-death experience was REOCCURRING! I thought it would kill me.
I soon read that marijuana increases serotonin in the brain.
5-HTP also does this, as does eating carbohydrates. This is when I came to the realization that more serotonin was NOT what we need during recovery. It is NOT the lack of the chemical that is the problem, it is the lack of
storage space.
And since it is agreed upon that the brain is being 're-wired' and serotonin plays a tug-of-war with blood vessels in the brain...
It became obvious that smoking weed is basically putting your foot on the accelerator. The
brain-raping accelerator.
Yes, that is the most apt description I can give to the 're-wiring' process.
As the serotonin nerves are carving their way through brain tissue, re-establishing receptor sites, brain functions are being disrupted. The result is anxiety, but the
sensation is so much worse. RAPE is the only word strong enough in my vocabulary...
So smoking weed is BAD.
The process is already hard enough - the brain needs to take it as slowly as possible. Lets not speed it up by suddenly shoving serotonin into the brain-stem! Mmmkay?
By the way, I believe that the activation of the stomach and intestines is the first event that marijuana causes in this sequence. Once this begins, peristalsis then causes serotonin to increase in the brain.
5-HTP is NOT a good idea if you have REAL receptor damage. It caused me enough anxiety to stop taking it after the first two times. Soon, I am going to try it again...i'll let you guys know.
Carbohydrates are evil already - they were not meant to exist in such abundance in the human diet.
But to the recovering MDMA sufferer, they are the absolute WORST food you can eat. The intestines cannot digest carbohydrates without going through a vast increase in serotonin activity in the brain. Other inflammatory processes occur as well, such as insulin production...blood glucose goes up. But carbohydrates do not
provide serotonin to replace what is spent, either.
Only tryptophan, an amino acid found in protein, can do this.
It is the sole precursor in our diets to BOTH serotonin AND bile.
When you eat a high protein diet, you are giving your brain all the serotonin AND digestive support you can. You are also lowering the serotonin activity required for peristalsis. The intestines can move meat along a LOT easier than carbs...
Back to the weed - if I smoke at ALL now I have developed a method.
I take ONE hit. Maaaaybe two.
That's it. I put it fucking DOWN.
With NO tolerance, that would get me high even in the good ol' days.
Now, it seems to be the magic number.
If I'm going to have a negative reaction, it is within reason.
But it takes 10-20 minutes to really feel the full effects.
When it is a pleasant high, it takes only 5 minutes to start enjoying it.
But when the onset is delayed, it feels like parts of my brain are experiencing the high at different times. I literally feel like the high is being 'dragged' from one segment of brain to the next. The symphony is in discord and the notes are played
separately. It is just NOT the same experience.
If there is real anxiety, it seems to burn through all of the high.
By the time the anxiety wears off, I just feel tired and useless...not buzzed and happy. This appears to be getting slowly better...I can count on the 2-hit rule a lot more than I used to.
Of note - I have also realized that lowering my tolerance can help.
If I have a BAD reaction, and I still try again the next night, it is usually not that bad. By the 3rd and 4th nights, it tends to be OK. But still, I follow the 2-hit rule.
This is in NO way an endorsement of smoking during recovery.
I am at the 8 month mark and only started trying to smoke around month 6.
Even with my cautious approach, I tire of the experience after a few days. I go weeks in between, and I don't miss it ONE BIT.
Thizzin, I do NOT recommend you try this at all.
Give it a few more months, and even then - ONE hit.
Only ONE...wait 20 minutes. If you want more - ONE hit.
Got it?
A friend of mine who experienced a VERY similar psychosis from mushroom abuse stopped smoking for over a YEAR. If you knew him you would be astounded at this statement, because now he can smoke anyone under the table...and he does. But he clearly remembers a drastic increase in anxiety and major stomach pain as a result. It just takes time...